Authors
Teresa Seeman, Sharon S Merkin, Eileen Crimmins, Brandon Koretz, Susan Charette, Arun Karlamangla
Publication date
2008/1/1
Journal
Social science & medicine
Volume
66
Issue
1
Pages
72-87
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Data from the nationally representative US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) III cohort were used to examine the hypothesis that socio-economic status is consistently and negatively associated with levels of biological risk, as measured by nine biological parameters known to predict health risks (diastolic and systolic blood pressure, pulse, HDL and total cholesterol, glycosylated hemoglobin, c-reactive protein, albumin and waist–hip ratio), resulting in greater cumulative burdens of biological risk among those of lower education and/or income. As hypothesized, consistent education and income gradients were seen for biological parameters reflecting cardiovascular, metabolic and inflammatory risk: those with lower education and income exhibiting greater prevalence of high-risk values for each of nine individual biological risk factors. Significant education and income gradients were also …
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